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Alirio Rosales

University of British Columbia
  •  Home
  •  Publications
    12
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    7

 More details
  • University of British Columbia
    Department of Philosophy
    Post-doctoral fellow
Vancouver, Canada
Areas of Interest
Philosophy of Biology
Philosophy of Computing and Information
Philosophy of Physical Science
General Philosophy of Science
  • All publications (12)
  •  7
    Kant and the Varieties of Content
    In Valerio Rohden, Ricardo R. Terra, Guido A. De Almeida & Margit Ruffing (eds.), Recht und Frieden in der Philosophie Kants, Walter De Gruyter. pp. 649-656. 2008.
  •  59
    Virtuous Distortion
    with John Woods
    In & C. Pizzi W. Carnielli L. Magnani (ed.), Model-Based Reasoning in Science and Technology, . pp. 3--30. 2010.
    Moral Character
  •  83
    The origins of the stochastic theory of population genetics: The Wright-Fisher model
    with Yoichi Ishida
    Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 79 (C): 101226. 2020.
  •  102
    Scientific Explanation and Trade-Offs Between Explanatory Virtues
    with Adam Morton
    Foundations of Science 26 (4): 1075-1087. 2019.
    “Explanation” refers to a wide range of activities, with a family resemblance between them. Most satisfactory explanations in a discipline for a domain fail to satisfy some general desiderata, while fulfilling others. This can happen in various ways. Why? An idealizing response would be to say that in real science explanations fall short along some dimensions, so that for any explanatory failure there is a conceivable improvement that addresses its shortcomings. The improvement may be more accur…Read more
    “Explanation” refers to a wide range of activities, with a family resemblance between them. Most satisfactory explanations in a discipline for a domain fail to satisfy some general desiderata, while fulfilling others. This can happen in various ways. Why? An idealizing response would be to say that in real science explanations fall short along some dimensions, so that for any explanatory failure there is a conceivable improvement that addresses its shortcomings. The improvement may be more accurate causally or possess more unifying power, or deliver deeper understanding. We formulate a drastically less idealizing response. We argue that there are typically trade-offs in explanation, so that in strengthening one explanatory virtue one will usually weaken another. Scientific explanations, if this is correct, are constrained by such trade-offs. Particular trade-offs are appropriate for particular explanatory vehicles. There are the overarching equations of theoretical physics, which produce unification at the expense of causal detail; there are theoretical models of phenomena that occupy a middle ground between generality and the detailed workings of particular cases and get closer to explaining the workings of specific systems at the expense of unification. Sometimes experiments aim at general causal patterns at the expense of particular detail; and sometimes they are designed to give us information of particular detail at the expense of generality. There are further trade-offs associated with other vehicles of explanation. We provide examples from physics and biology.
    Science, Logic, and Mathematics
  •  64
    The Philosophy of Evolutionary Biology in Theory and Practice
    Biological Theory 2 (2): 205-207. 2007.
    Evolutionary BiologyPhilosophy of Biology, MiscellaneousPhilosophy of Biology, General Works
  •  159
    Samir Okasha, Evolution and the Levels of Selection. Oxford: Oxford University Press , 263 pp., $55.00
    Philosophy of Science 75 (2): 254-256. 2008.
    Science, Logic, and MathematicsLevels and Units of Selection
  •  40
    Theories that narrate the world: Ronald A. Fisher's mass selection and Sewall Wright's shifting balance
    Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 62 22-30. 2017.
    Science, Logic, and Mathematics
  •  222
    John Maynard Smith and the natural philosophy of␣adaptation
    Biology and Philosophy 20 (5): 1027-1040. 2005.
    One of the most remarkable aspects of John Maynard Smith’s work was the fact that he devoted time both to doing science and to reflecting philosophically upon its methods and concepts. In this paper I offer a philosophical analysis of Maynard Smith’s approach to modelling phenotypic evolution in relation to three main themes. The first concerns the type of scientific understanding that ESS and optimality models give us. The second concerns the causal–historical aspect of stability analyses of ad…Read more
    One of the most remarkable aspects of John Maynard Smith’s work was the fact that he devoted time both to doing science and to reflecting philosophically upon its methods and concepts. In this paper I offer a philosophical analysis of Maynard Smith’s approach to modelling phenotypic evolution in relation to three main themes. The first concerns the type of scientific understanding that ESS and optimality models give us. The second concerns the causal–historical aspect of stability analyses of adaptation. The third concerns the concept of evolutionary stability itself. Taken together, these three themes comprise what I call the natural philosophy of adaptation.
    AdaptationismOptimalityGenotypes and Phenotypes
  •  1
    La filosofía matemática de Kant en discusión: un comentario sobre "Intuición y construcción" de Sabine Knabenschuh de Porta
    Apuntes Filosóficos 9
  • Racionalidad crítica y libertad: una reflexión kantiana
    Filosofía: Revista del postgrado de Filosofía de la Universidad de los Andes 22. 2013.
  • Empresa racionalidad y ética
    Apuntes Filosóficos 4
  • Vías y extravíos del pensamiento latinoamericano, con un epílogo sobre el relativismo
    Filosofía: Revista del postgrado de Filosofía de la Universidad de los Andes 22. 2013.
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